A key scholarly debate in late colonial law concerns the interpretation of the ‘reasonable man’. The reasonable man, whose paradigmatic status was itself a contested subject for English law, was all the more problematic for colonial law when the idea of a ‘reasonable native’ was presumed in and of itself to be questionable. Should the ‘native’ be held to the same standard of reasonableness as the Englishman? And if not, what standard of reason was valid? This article examines how popular literature of the period, both fiction and memoir, reflects these concerns. Focusing on accounts of colonial Nigeria, I show how this literature repeatedly complicates the perceived ‘reasonableness’ of both Europeans and colonial subjects. Moreover, I demon...
Recent scholarship on 'neo-traditionalism' and colonial governance in Africa has challenged assumpti...
Western man has great pride in his political institutions, which with some justification he holds to...
“This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Management & Organiza...
The doctrine of repugnancy owes it origin to the medieval period and evolution of English equity. Th...
This article challenges the colonial delegitimization of Nigeria’s customary law. The author describ...
This article challenges the colonial delegitimization of Nigeria's customary law. The author describ...
Forty years ago, E. P. Thompson praised the English rule of law forged during the bloody and fractio...
Perhaps, one element of colonialism that most traumatized the Gold Coast before independence is the ...
The British Common Law provides an overriding background to human conduct and the dispensation of ju...
This article argues that despite its claim to be most concerned with the nature of law in the genera...
Nigeria secured independence from Britain over fifty years ago but prevailing socio-political turmoi...
Colonialism became a fact of life in many African countries. An effect of colonialism especially in ...
This essay explores the role of the organized legal profession in relation to British Imperialism, s...
The extant literature covering indigenous peoples resident on the African continent targets colonial...
This thesis explores the origins of the reasonable man, an important concept in Anglo-saxon liabilit...
Recent scholarship on 'neo-traditionalism' and colonial governance in Africa has challenged assumpti...
Western man has great pride in his political institutions, which with some justification he holds to...
“This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Management & Organiza...
The doctrine of repugnancy owes it origin to the medieval period and evolution of English equity. Th...
This article challenges the colonial delegitimization of Nigeria’s customary law. The author describ...
This article challenges the colonial delegitimization of Nigeria's customary law. The author describ...
Forty years ago, E. P. Thompson praised the English rule of law forged during the bloody and fractio...
Perhaps, one element of colonialism that most traumatized the Gold Coast before independence is the ...
The British Common Law provides an overriding background to human conduct and the dispensation of ju...
This article argues that despite its claim to be most concerned with the nature of law in the genera...
Nigeria secured independence from Britain over fifty years ago but prevailing socio-political turmoi...
Colonialism became a fact of life in many African countries. An effect of colonialism especially in ...
This essay explores the role of the organized legal profession in relation to British Imperialism, s...
The extant literature covering indigenous peoples resident on the African continent targets colonial...
This thesis explores the origins of the reasonable man, an important concept in Anglo-saxon liabilit...
Recent scholarship on 'neo-traditionalism' and colonial governance in Africa has challenged assumpti...
Western man has great pride in his political institutions, which with some justification he holds to...
“This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Management & Organiza...